Unpopular Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan pleaded for public “understanding” yesterday after a poll showed three-quarters of people questioned his leadership and handling of the post-disaster crisis.
In a telephone survey released by Kyodo news agency on Saturday, 76 percent of 1,010 respondents believed Kan was “not exercising leadership” in dealing with the March 11 quake and tsunami and the ensuing crisis at a nuclear power plant.
About 24 percent wanted the prime minister to “resign immediately,” up from 14 percent in a similar poll conducted two weeks after the disaster that left 26,000 people dead or missing and crippled the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant.
“People may feel that the government is acting slowly in various aspects and they may have lingering fears in various aspects. I can understand their feelings,” Kan said in parliament.
However, “at the same time, I can say that the government for its part has been doing its utmost ... if not in a perfect manner. I want to call on the people to understand this,” he said.
Kan was answering questions from a member of the conservative opposition before the upper house budget committee, which was discussing a ¥4 trillion (US$49 billion) extra budget to help fund post-disaster reconstruction.
Both the ruling bloc as well as major opposition parties are expected to give the final nod to the budget today.
Before the catastrophe, Kan’s approval rating slumped below 20 percent, its lowest since he took office in June last year.
Since the disaster, Kan has been criticized for being slow in taking steps to distribute relief goods and cash donations and for not preventing the stricken Fukushima plant from leaking radiation in the worst nuclear accident since Chernobyl.
His initial move to set up 20 advisory groups to deal with the crisis has been ridiculed as showing his incompetence as a national leader.
Under the prime minister’s prodding, the plant’s operator, Tokyo Electric Power Co, announced a roadmap in the middle of last month to put the plant’s reactors into a “cold shutdown” within six to nine months.
Although its feasibility has been widely questioned, Kan told the committee: “It was me who has ordered the roadmap to be drawn up.”
“I am trying to expedite the project to let all the [evacuated] people settle themselves in temporary housing, if they wish, by Obon [a Buddhist holiday in early August],” Kan said.
Kan had already been facing calls for him to quit over a donations scandal the day the tsunami hit.
Kan’s center-left Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) swept to power in an electoral landslide in 2009, ending half a century of almost unbroken conservative rule and winning a vast majority in the key lower house.
However, the prime minister’s backing for a higher consumer tax led the DPJ to defeat in an upper house election in July last year.
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